Inspirited by Elfreda’s emphatic
prediction of good fortune, Grace left Haven Home
in a livelier frame of mind than she had exhibited
when entering the house. As they strolled down
the walk she was further cheered by the sight of a
single, half-opened rose, flaunting its crimson but
lonely glory from a late-blooming bush. Elfreda,
who was bent on lightening Grace’s mood, soberly
assured her that it was merely another lucky sign.
Carefully plucking the fragrant token of good fortune,
Grace breathed a prayer that this might indeed be true.
Tackling her rôle of comforter with
a will, Elfreda enlivened the walk home with numerous
accounts of signs and wonders which had visited friends
and acquaintances of hers as heralds of great good
fortune. “Of course, I’m only telling
you what I’ve heard,” she said humorously.
“I can’t say that I’ve ever had
any direct manifestations that good luck was signaling
to me. Once I went to a bazaar and paid a dollar
for the privilege of drawing a number from a hat.
I had a hunch that I’d win something. I
also had my eye on a hand-painted chocolate pot, but
my lucky number drew a toy velocipede instead.
Still I was lucky to draw anything. Then another
time I found a horseshoe in the road. I hung it
over the front door and next day it fell down on Pa’s
head when he was coming into the house. That
was a very unlucky day for me.” Elfreda
giggled reminiscently. “Pa raged like a
lion. He declared I did it purposely and pitched
the horseshoe into the street. I let it stay
there. I wasn’t much impressed with its
lucky qualities. Just the same it didn’t
cure me of my belief in signs.”
Grace’s ready laughter held
a merry note that was intensely gratifying to the
narrator of the tragic horseshoe episode. She
had succeeded even better than she had expected, was
Elfreda’s reflection. Then, too, the unexpected
sight of Tom Gray’s handwriting on the back of
the painting, coupled with the finding of the rose,
had brought a look of new animation to Grace’s
too-calm features.
“I am afraid I shall have to
take back my promise not to go to Haven Home again
soon,” was Grace’s half apologetic comment
as the two emerged from Upton Wood upon the highway
that wound its way from the outskirts of Oakdale through
the open country beyond the town. “I feel
now as though I wanted to go there often, just to
read Tom’s message. I like to think of
it as a message. Strange that I never recalled
the incident until to-day.”
“It was not intended that you
should,” maintained Elfreda. “As for
taking back your promise, you never really made one.
If I were you, though, I’d stay away from that
house as long as I could. But if I found that
I was determined to go there, then I’d go.”
“That is very wise and elastic
counsel,” asserted Grace. “It can
be stretched to cover all my moods and yearnings.”
Arm in arm, the two friends swung
briskly along the highway, following it until they
reached the wide tree-lined street in which the Harlowe
residence stood. When within a short distance
of the house, their glance became simultaneously fixed
on two childish forms racing toward them at full speed.
“Here come Elizabeth and Anna
May Angerell.” An indulgent smile curved
Grace’s lips. “They have spied us
from afar. They are the dearest little girls.
I can’t begin to tell you what a comfort they’ve
been to me this summer. They’re such joyous
youngsters. They fairly bubble with happiness.
What a wonderful estate childhood is, Elfreda.
Yet we never realize it until long after it has passed
away. I’ve often wished I could go back
and live it over, even for one day.”
“I’d rather be grown up,”
disagreed Elfreda. “I never had a very good
time when I was little, because I was always grieving
over being a prize fat child. The way of the
baby elephant is pretty thorny. Well, well!”
she exclaimed playfully as the two little girls, laughing
gleefully, ended their run by flinging themselves
ecstatically upon herself and Grace. “What’s
the meaning of this onslaught? If we hadn’t
been very large, sturdy persons we might have tumbled
over like nine-pins.”
“We saw you coming away up the
street,” joyfully announced Anna May. “We
just had to run. We’ve been watching at
our gate for you quite a while.”
“There’s company come
to see you, Miss Harlowe,” burst forth Elizabeth
excitedly. “You can never guess who.
It’s somebody you’ve known for a long
time, but it’s somebody you don’t see very
often. We aren’t going to tell you who’s
on the porch. We want you to be surprised.
Do hurry as fast as ever you can, for the person is
anxious to see you.”
“We thought we’d tell
you the minute we saw you, and then we thought it
would be more fun not to,” explained Anna May
wriggling with enjoyment of the great secret.
Elfreda and Grace exchanged lightning
glances as they quickened their pace, a devoted worshipper
hanging to an arm of each. Could Elfreda’s
prophesy of good fortune have been thus so quickly
fulfilled?
“It’s not Mr. Gray.”
Elizabeth had remembered that long ago Grace had answered
her eager inquiry for “nice Mr. Tom” by
saying that he had gone on a journey from which he
might return at any time. She had remembered,
too, how sad her dear Miss Grace had looked when she
told her. When the two children had posted themselves
at the gate to watch for Grace, Elizabeth had remarked
confidentially to Anna May, “If Mr. Gray was
sitting on the porch waiting for Miss Harlowe, we couldn’t
surprise her. We’d just tell her straight
out. We wouldn’t want to make her guess
that, would we?” And Anna May had replied:
“No, siree. We ought to tell her the first
thing that it’s not him, so that she won’t
look disappointed when she sees who the company is.”
The startled light that had leaped
into Grace’s eyes died as Elizabeth frankly
excluded Tom’s name from the guessing contest.
She inwardly rebuked herself for thus clutching at
every straw which the wind blew in her direction.
On catching a first glimpse of the veranda, she cried
out sharply. Relaxing her light hold on Elfreda’s
arm and dropping Elizabeth’s hand, she darted
to the gate, slammed it behind her and raced up the
walk to the steps, an animated flash of blue on the
autumn landscape.
“Jean!” she almost shouted.
“Where, oh, where did you come from?” The
next instant she held one of the hunter’s rough
hands in both hers, half laughing, half crying.
“Mam’selle Grace,
it is of a truth the great ’appiness to see you,”
was the old man’s sincere greeting, his small
black eyes shining with feeling. “Jean
has come far. Long way,” he waved a comprehensive
hand toward the west. “I come because I
hav’ learn that you hav’ the trouble.”
“But how long have you been
in Oakdale and who told you about Tom?” questioned
Grace anxiously. “We have gone to your cabin
in Upton Wood several times, in the hope that you
had returned. The first time we went we saw the
sign on the door.”
“I put him there,” nodded
Jean, “because I go ’way for long time.
Many weeks I stay in Canada. Only to-day I come
back. Then ”
“Did some one in Oakdale tell
you Tom was missing?” interrogated Grace, cutting
almost impatiently into Jean’s narrative.
“No, Mam’selle.
Only I hav’ speak the bon jour to my frien’s
as I come through the town. Some days have pass
since firs’ I see this.” Jean pulled
a newspaper from a pocket of his weather-stained coat.
Spreading it open and laboriously perusing the first
page, he tendered it to Grace, pointing out a column
in it.
Grace needed but to glance at it to
recognize it as a copy of the newspaper recording
Tom Gray’s disappearance, which Hippy had brought
her. “How did you ever happen to come across
this, Jean?” Her query held a note of positive
awe.
“It is of a truth strange,”
admitted Jean. “W’en I stay long time
in Canada I come back to this country to Minnesota.
I go to Duluth, w’ere I hav’ ol’
frien’. I spen’ two days by him an’
talk about many t’ings w’ich ’appen
to us long ago w’en we hunt together. He
tell me about a young man who come up north an’
get los’. Nobody can fin’. He
show me this paper an’ say, ‘W’en
I read this I t’ink you, Jean, can fin’
this young man, because you great hunter.’
Then I look an’ see the young man is M’sieu’
Tom, an’ the paper is ol’ one. So
I leave my pack skins wit’ my frien’ and
come here quick on the train, because I know Mam’selle
Grace will tell all. Then I go fin’ M’sieu’
Tom,” ended Jean, wagging his gray head with
deep determination.
“Talk about miracles!”
burst forth Elfreda Briggs. “It’s
the most remarkable thing I ever knew to happen.”
Elfreda had lost no time in overtaking Grace on the
veranda. The Angerell children had not followed,
however. They had trotted on home, well satisfied
with the result of their mission.
“It is truly marvelous.
And to think that Mother isn’t at home this
afternoon to hear it. It was splendid in you to
wait here for me, Jean.” Grace turned a
glowing face toward the old hunter. “As
for your going to find Tom, I am sure that
you will find him. I was so amazed at
seeing you, I forgot to introduce you to my friend
Miss Briggs. She knows all about you, already.”
Elfreda extended a prompt hand of
welcome to the intrepid old trapper, who grasped it
warmly, saying: “The frien’s of Mam’selle
Grace are also the frien’s of ol’ Jean.”
“Jean, before I tell you all
I know about Tom’s disappearance, I think it
would be better for the three of us to go on to Mrs.
Gray’s home and talk things over. She will
be so glad to see you. She has suffered dreadfully.
We have all suffered. But I feel now as though
at last the light had begun to break.”